AUSTRALIAN InStruCtIOn FOrM - Boomerang Australia 2025

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As a result, it is understandable that the First Nations peoples term for boomerang varies across the continent. This is seen where the Butchulla people from Fraser Island call them barcan, and on North Stradbroke Island the Geonpul people call them barragun (McCarthy, F.D. 1961).
3:07 8:00 And so that rests on the bottom. And lean it back always throw it so that the its pointed like thisMoreAnd so that rests on the bottom. And lean it back always throw it so that the its pointed like this not like that. So be like this and when you throw the boomerang.
Boomerang is an Australian childrens pay television channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery International and a sister service of Cartoon Network.
0:36 1:29 Again. We need to get the catch of course. Nice all the way around im going to take a few steps.MoreAgain. We need to get the catch of course. Nice all the way around im going to take a few steps. Forward nice got it hopefully you guys found that helpful.
These weapons, sometimes called throwsticks or kylies, were used for hunting a variety of prey, from kangaroos to parrots; at a range of about 100 m (330 ft), a 2 kg (4.4 lb) non-returning boomerang could inflict mortal injury to a large animal.
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A boomerang is a curved piece of wood that returns to the thrower if tossed correctly. To boomerang is to bounce back to a previous position like a boomerang. This word comes whirling to us from an Australian language (Dharuk). The primary meaning is the curved stick that returns to its owner after being thrown.
For Aboriginal people the boomerang is a symbol of cultural endurance and a tangible link to their long presence on this continent. The boomerang features in Aboriginal creation mythology, and for Aboriginal people the boomerang is considered as old as the continent.

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